Nosy is a just-hatched, nidifugous (early flying) pterodactyl, who, urged by his stunt-flying mom Aviatrix, hops out of the egg and takes to wing to check out the Jurassic landscape where he was born. Nosy is especially curious about the other dinosaurs in his environment, especially a family of apatosauruses he spots on the great plain on the other side of the lake.

Although his mother, Aviatrix, and his father, Clawed, superciliously discourage association with what they consider a substandard species, little Nosy is curious about the baby apatosaurus he sees feeding on the ground vegetation and hiding in the lake with only her nostrils above the surface. So while his parents hang out upside down to catch some extra snooze time, Nosy sets out to visit his new neighbors. Quickly he and the young apatosaurus, whom he names Banty, become friends. Nosy rides on Banty's back during their long conversations and takes to the air to watch for their common enemy, the formidable T. Rex named Hack the Ripper while Banty grazes.

At the youngsters' urging, the two families become friendly despite their earlier prejudices. It's an alliance that serves them well when Hack the Ripper pays a visit to their side of the plain and almost turns Banty into an appetizer for the fearsome predator. The two species combine their special endowments--speed and flight for the pterodactyls and great strength for the apatosauruses--to put an end to the T. Rex's terrible reign on the plain.

Illustrator Nick Bruel (Bad Kitty, Poor Puppy) adds his quirky, comic art style to King-Smith's witty text to make this transitional novel an easy page turner for the early independent reader. Although mom Aviatrix has a most prolix vocabulary, she defines all of her tongue-twisting terms (nidifugous, primogeniture, somniloquist) in conversations with Nosy and with her somewhat dim-bulb mate, Clawed, and the two youngsters prove to be apt pupils for her vocabulary lessons. Altogether, this is a fun read for the elementary crowd carried off in Dick King-Smith's inimitable style.

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Retired after 32+ years as an elementary librarian, I really miss the joy of bringing together the right book with the right reader at the right time. Loving both kids and books equally as I do, perhaps helping children and the adults who care about them find good books through this blog is the next best thing to being there.
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